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Cell Tech International donates up to 10% of
its harvest to feeding and enhancing the health of people in need. They are involved in
numerous projects around the world.![]() Plans for The Indigenous Peoples' Project were begun in January 1997 as a response to a call for help from the Dine (Navajo) tribal members who are resisting forced relocation in the Big Mountain region of the Navajo reservation in Arizona. The Super Blue Green Algae for this project feeds approximately 100 people who suffer overwhelming poverty so common among traditional people. The Dine Elders and their families endure physical ailments due to forced living conditions and the lack of any real nutrition or even acceptable drinking water. ![]() After difficulties in establishing regular shipments of Super Blue Green Algae to the children of Chernobyl, Cell Tech Int'l accepted a second pilot project to attempt to regulate shipments of Algae to those in the greatest need. They are currently supporting 115 children and 50 cancer patients. ![]() This has been one of the Cell Tech Int'l's projects since 1995. The Super Blue Green Algae they ship to this project feeds 24 children in an orphanage in Neyba as well as 50 children in the attached school. In addition, the Algae feeds the project coordinator in the Dominican Republic, his wife and six children. ![]() Cell Tech Int'l adopted this project in January 1997, although distributors had previously worked to deliver Super Blue Green Algae to the children of Ghana. Cell Tech is sending enough Algae to feed 500 children suffering from extreme malnutrition. Workers from the regional hospital are studying the effects of Super Blue Green Algae on the children. The coordinator reported shortly after the project began that she already saw improvement in a number of children. ![]() The Energia Para La Vida project began with a nutritional recovery program in Antigua, Guatemala, and in November 1994 the first shipments of Super Blue Green Algae arrived at the social welfare clinic there. A second project provides the Algae for two meals a week for children at several sites throughout the country. Currently, Cell Tech Int'l is providing SBG Algae for 1000 people there. ![]() This project was adopted in November 1996. They are supplying Super Blue Green Algae to 19 people who work in the administration of L'Hopital Bon Samaritain, a non-profit hospital in Limbe, Haiti, subsidized by donations to the HBS Foundation. The Tibetan population and culture are on
the verge of extinction, having suffered systematic eradication by Chinese occupiers since 1949.
This project, Compassion in the Himalayas, was formed in April 1995 to
address a host of needs ranging from housing to education. Currently, Tibetan nuns and children
at two schools in Dharmsala, India, receive Super Blue Green Algae, and shipments have already
reached four other schools in the remote villages of Ladakh and Spiti. The Kenya Kids' Project began in March 1997 to help provide Super Blue Green Algae to 54 orphaned children living at Nyumbani (Swahili for "home"). Father Angelo D'Agostino, MD, founded this hospice in 1992. The children living at Nyumbani have been abandoned at birth by their HIV positive mothers. While many of these children test HIV positive initially, with proper care and nutrition, a great many of them can actually test HIV negative, resulting in their availability for adoption. ![]() In December, 1996 Cell Tech Int'l donated the local historic Baldwin House to the Klamath Crisis Center as a safe house for battered women and children. The City Council unanimously voted on a grant for the Crisis Center which highlighted the broad base of support the Shelter has in Klamath County. The Crisis Center plans to shelter up to 100 women and children. This is a unique opportunity to demonstrate how effective Super Blue Green Algae products can be with people who truly need Energy For Life. This project was begun in March, 1998. Since 1992 Cell Tech Int'l and its Distributors have made an important contribution to the nutrition and the lives of the people of Nandaime, Nicaragua. Cell Tech continues to supply over 3,600 children and elders with Super Blue Green Algae. This was the premier project for Cell Tech, and it's still going strong! ![]() Cell Tech Int'l adopted this project in the summer of 1996. The Algae that is sent to this project is used to help supplement the nutrition of mothers and their children in the Centre Jacques Cartier, a community center, in Quebec City. The project participants are low-income families who have come to the center to learn about improving their nutrition. Mercy Medical Mission is a non-profit
organization working with hospitals and orphanages in the former Soviet Union. It is estimated
that a third of the children who grow up in orphanages commit suicide and about half of them
wind up in prison. Those who survive leave the orphanages at 15 years of age. They are
ill-prepared to face the world, suffering from both poor education and poor health. Cell Tech is
providing Algae to thousands of children in the Irkutsk Region (Siberia) and the Perm Region
(the Ural Mountains). This is the newest project, begun in April, 1998. Cell Tech Int'l adopted this project in November 1997. They support 100 children in the Calumna area by sending Super Blue Green Algae via the Daily Bread Charitable Trust. The Daily Bread Missions were established in 1987 to alleviate the hunger of often destitute people seeking work on the streets of Bast London, South Africa. |
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